College board owns this process, and it’s their job to make sure the setup works correctly for all students, including those who might not all be technically inclined.
College board owns this process, and it’s their job to make sure the setup works correctly for all students, including those who might not all be technically inclined.
[1] https://forums.developer.apple.com/thread/97036 [2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17587923
[2] http://www.hackerfactor.com/blog/index.php?/archives/833-HEI...
It's also not clear to me that this patent license is actually an issue in terms of decoding and converting file formats on the backend. Even if that were the case, I'm certain there is some commercial license software they could purchase to do that for them. This isn't an open-source endeavor, and they charge each student to take the exam.
The testing system for not using the <input> tag appropiately and Apple for using a closed, patent encumbered format as the default when most of their users don't know about software patents.
> It's also not clear to me that this patent license is actually an issue in terms of decoding and converting file formats on the backend.
It's reasonable to assume that it is.
2. Sure, the college could pay, but looking at the broader problem here, saying that colleges should accept closed formats would make it really hard for open source online testing systems to proliferate, and all colleges around the world would have to pay royalties to the HEIC patent holders.
Even if they were to implement an open source decoder, unless you have plenty of lawyers, the legal uncertainty of the situation could be unacceptable to many individuals/institutions.
3. If the format was open in the first place, maybe we would have lots of open source decoders and maybe the library that the testing system developer used would have support for it, and would have transparently worked without the developer knowing about the format.